Let me talk about intuitive feelings first:
British dramas are so flavorful! Oops! This is not Dune Paul's mother! So beautiful!
Talk about some details:
The characters in the play still focus on the male characters, the Emperor Edward, his two courtiers, the dignitaries of all parties, and the church.
The centrist Stanley is particularly well portrayed, and such people abound in historical trends.
In the game of everyone, he neither wins nor loses. He becomes a key role in the final moment, able to bend and stretch, and is an out-and-out careerist.
But the title of the play is "The White Queen," and the female characters in it seem to be sentimental, jealous, and surrounding men.
The only two Margaritas that are different, one strong and the other pious, both express their ambitions in different ways.
But it's history after all, and today's people will inevitably fall behind when they look at the old people. In that era, the greatest role of aristocratic women was to multiply and breed, allowing the royal blood to be inherited.
The witchcraft involved in it was not fabricated out of thin air. People believed in witchcraft during the Elizabethan period in England (that is, when Shakespeare was in), just like China believed in immortals and ghosts.
Finally, let me talk about my views on the war after reading it:
The war between the white rose and the red rose, the cruelty of the cold weapon era, is vividly manifested in the last episode.
To conclude with the words of the White Queen in the play: "vengeance brings only more vengeance, and battle brings death."
It's still a good drama, it's worth watching, and the background knowledge will be added offline.
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